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Tài liệu Mastering the craft of science writing part 14 doc

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This page intentionally left blank six Refining your draft is much like editing someone else’s work, except that you always have the writer handy— maybe too handy, as the inner writer tends to defend the status quo. (“Oh, but that image is so funny.”) An editor, by definition, has one enormous advantage that the writer does not: a fresh eye. Not knowing what the manuscript is supposed to say, the editor can tell what it does say, the better to spot any gaps and goofs. Editing your own work is hard primarily because you lack that outsider’s view. You can approximate it, however. Don’t you find that you can often tell how something might look to someone else? Now is the time to call on that social ability. Before you start refining, do whatever will freshen your view of the manuscript. At a minimum, take a break and print out the manuscript. Because I revise exten- sively, I write and print my manuscripts in galley format, which you may care to try—single-spaced, at some forty- two to sixty characters per line, never more. Forty-two is a traditional line count for newspapers because that’s about how many characters the human mind can process at one time. As a result, forty-two is highly readable. A newspa- per reader runs his eye right down the middle of the col- umn with no significant left-to-right movement, there- fore no chance of losing his place. Readability is still good at sixty characters, a width that offers the writer one extra advantage: It puts more text on each page, so that you see every word and sentence in its full context. Either width gives you plenty of room to write reactions and correc- tions.You can scrawl whole new paragraphs, if you like. Give thought as well to your typeface, because if your Refining Your Draft The first law of intelligent tinkering is to save all the parts. —Poul Anderson text is physically hard to read, you’re working under a hand- icap. Research demonstrated years ago that serif typefaces, the ones with high-rising l’s and h’s and with little cross strokes (serifs) across the top or bottom of many letters, are easier to read than sans serif types, the ones with plain letters. (This one is called Gill Sans Light.) You would expect otherwise, but so it is. Serifs make letters and words look more different from one another, so that sustained reading takes less effort. To test this notion, put a piece of paper horizontally half covering a line of the Gill Sans type. How well can you read it? Now try the same experiment with any serif type. The king of readable type, to my mind, is still Times Roman, a precomputer clas- sic developed specifically for high readability. While your manuscript prints, it may help to straighten your desk. Put away your writing clutter, the better to segue into editor mode. Then go do something else in another room. Even a lunch break will help, and a weekend or a week off will be better yet. After your break, proceed as if you had never seen the manuscript before.The idea is to approximate an out- sider’s clear view of the piece as it stands. Take a moment to look forward to seeing the piece as a whole. (What we ex- pect to happen tends to happen, after all.) See if you can work up an active curiosity as to how the piece will read— and make sure you will not be interrupted. The answering machine should be on and the door shut, because this read- ing is special. It is your first, best chance to see the piece as it is, warts, glories, and all. Permit no distractions. Read at cruising speed, like any other reader, but jot down your reactions in the border. Note that word—your reac- tions, not fixes.Work on paper, with the computer turned off. The paper looks different from the screen, where you’ve seen those words so often. Reading on paper, then, will rein- force your hard-won sense of newness. Second, with your computer turned off, you’ll be less tempted to go in and fix just this one little thing . which can easily turn into three little things and the spinning of wheels. Most of us, given the chance, can spend five to ten minutes moving a single comma in and out, in and out, which feels like progress be- cause the screen is always clean. By working on paper, you avoid such loops of vacillation. Ideas into Words 112 At first, you may find yourself pulled into fixing, which you should resist. Of course, it’s fine to mark any typos or gram- matical problems that leap to the eye, as you’ll do by reflex. Just don’t stop to think about fixes. Keep moving, reserving your attention for the text and your own reactions.You want to notice every slightest flicker of boredom, impatience, con- fusion, put-off-ness, or pleasure. Do you have an impulse to skim? To jump ahead? To laugh? Are you working hard? Is your mind wandering? Make a quick note and keep moving. Write barely enough that you’ll know what you meant, along these lines: Waiting for story to start. What’s this about? Bored Woke up here, comp. lab busy at midnight a good touch LOL [laughed out loud] Skimming, impatient Now I get it GREAT anecdote! Same idea as on page 2? feels repet This man very annoying Why so much detail? Don’t see why matters Boring Huh? I thought he was dating the Marilyn Monroe! Snickered What happened to the baby? This is ne w? Sounds like common sense Feels repetitive smiley-face Feels jerky BORING Huh? Inhaler bad for asthma? Who he? Annoyed by all the first person What’s Jones say? Thot he the authority How example relate to point? Great quote Interesting, but not clear What happened to the baby? Getting v. impatient! And so on. An occasional wavy squiggle down the border can serve as an all-purpose indicator that something awk- ward needs reworking. Refining Your Draft 113 Read the text out loud, or at least murmur it to yourself, lips moving, in order to spotlight any awkward patches. Are there places where you want to draw a breath but the sentence will not allow it? Give it a wavy squiggle. Do the b’s and p’s and awkward syllables begin to pile up in a way that is uncomfortable to speak? Ditto. Does your tongue stumble, for any reason or no reason? It’s a problem. Reading out loud brings any such problem to the forefront. Noting positive reactions is a must, and not only to pre- serve morale. Most of us tend to think of editing as “fix- ing” what is off.We forget the other half of the job, and maybe the more important half—retaining and strength- ening what is good. The better to retain it, mark it. When you have read straight through and are ready to edit, continue to work on paper. It is quicker, easier, and more effective than working on computer because you will often be adjusting passages in relation to each other. Scrolling, scrolling, scrolling, up and down, back and forth—without ever being able to see the separate passages side by side—is the hard way. Your old printout being heavily scrawled with reactions, you will need a fresh one on which to write your fixes. Try printing it on paper of a different color, so that you can dis- tinguish the manuscripts at a glance. First, three general rules: When in doubt, throw it out. If I had to choose one single idea as my sole teaching, it would be this one, a maxim gen- eralized from a grandmotherly bit of wisdom about dirty laundry. “If it’s doubtful, it’s dirty.” On the same principle, if you fear that a word or a sentence or a passage may be tedious, overwritten, unclear, irrelevant, sentimental, needlessly offensive, or whatever—it is.When in doubt, throw it out. At the least, put it in the bone heap. Your subconscious is your friend. If your subconscious made you do something, ask yourself why. Whatever mis- take you have made, your subconscious had a reason— maybe a good one. See if you can figure out what the prob- lem was, a process that often feels like having a dialogue with yourself. You ask the question and wait. In time, an an- swer comes drifting up: Ideas into Words 114 Q. So why did we drop that story in there? A.Well, it seemed to connect. Q. And does it? A.Well, yes! Actually, it does, or part of it does, in such- and-so a way. Q. We’d better spell the connection out! A.Yes, and cut the other part. Or you might find you had felt a need to keep the human side of science more in sight. Great! Knowing that, you can now rummage through your notes to find a livelier, shorter, more relevant tidbit. Or you might have been postponing the hard work of grappling with topic X (sigh). And so on. Once you know clearly what problem you were trying to solve, the solution is often obvious. Do not follow rules, even rules promulgated in this book. Do something intelligent. There are no rules for writing, or at least, no rules that are universal. An engineer friend once asked me how I could know when my work was good enough. I said I didn’t know, that I just did the best I could. “Oh,” she said, “I couldn’t stand that. It’s so ambiguous.With a building, it either stays up or it doesn’t.” Are you like my friend in preferring firm ground? Hmm. You probably would like some rules. The truth is, however, that writing is inherently uncertain, even science writing. Your best bet is just to keep asking: What do I want to say? Am I saying it? Is it working? When it isn’t working, do something intelligent. In editing, your initial concern should be structural. Aim to strengthen and balance the whole. Sweep through from beginning to end, again and again, solving the problems that your reactions pinpoint—first the big ones, then small ones. Whenever your editing manuscript gets too mucked up, enter the changes and print out a fresh one.You may at that point want to do another reaction reading. Let’s look first at a few large questions that will need to be thought through for each and every piece you write. Do you actually have an opener? Or were you merely clearing your throat? Initial reactions like “Bored” and “What’s this a bout?” are ominous. Sometimes writers spend their first few pages setting con- Refining Your Draft 115 text or reporting history or exercising charm, any of which can constitute throat-clearing—something, anything, that the writer has to do in order to get started. We all do it, be- ginners and veterans alike, but you won’t want to leave throat-clearing in your draft. Look now at your first para- graph, asking: Do I really need this? Does it have substance without which the reader cannot go on? Does it grab? Go on to the next paragraph, asking the same questions, and the next, and the next. All too often, you can drop the first few paragraphs (or even pages) with no loss. Keep going. However long you humphed and garumphed, chances are good you will eventually come to a paragraph that makes you sit up. Oh, you think. Here it is! Yes, the scene in the computer lab! It’s the essence of what the story is about.With just a little tweaking, it will be perfect. Often both pace and tone change at this turning point, as the writer settles into a stride. Even working on your own writing, you may be able to identify the real opener by its tonal shift alone. Does the opener still match the story as it turned out to be? Does the piece deliver on its promise?Your vision and your topic evolved as you wrote—they always do. Adjust ac- cordingly. Perhaps your opener promised something the finished story does not deliver, or perhaps you promised too little. As always, controlling context and reader expectation is key. If the lead promises to explain why Johnny can’t read, you must come up with a sensible argument. If you promise only to visit several classrooms and see various well-regarded teachers at work, the readers will be happy with that, too— unless you led them to expect “the” answer. It can be aston- ishing how much a weak or limited article perks up when you scale back the promise to something the article delivers. Even when the promise is right, a first-draft opener can feel stiff and congested, at least compared with what you wrote after you were warmed up. Can you import some of that ease into your opener? If the opener is seriously off, don’t tinker. Take a new run at it. Close your eyes, imagine the central reader, and go. If she were sitting there, what would you say? Now say it on paper. Ideas into Words 116 Do you actually have a closer? Between fatigue and a desire to be done, you may have simply stopped without telling the reader good-bye. Or you may have an excellent closer buried beneath some closing boomph, some kind of unnecessary repetitive flour- ish that you wrote out of sheer momentum. Throat-clearing can take place at the end of a talk, too: Sometimes we cling to the mike in case we think of one more thing to say. If a new or better closer now occurs to you, draft it. If not, leave yourself a note and come back later.Your piece still has a ways to go. Take a look at the passages you marked as any variant of “boring.” Do you want or need the material? Sometimes writing loses its fizz because the writer is proceeding out of sheer duty: It happened or the guy said it, so we write it. But maybe it doesn’t belong. Maybe you’d rather emphasize the exciting second half of his career, and to hell with his earlier work. The question is, If that “boring” section vanished, would it be missed? What contribution does it make? What contribution could it make? A contribution need not be factual, or even intellectual. Your writing also needs humanizing detail, changes of pace, a few hearty laughs, good examples, and a hundred other things. Sometimes you and your subconscious will find that you wrote a whole section for one wonderful bit, when all you needed was the bit. Would the passage work better if heavily pruned? Or fleshed out? Or in some other part of the article? Is the passage boring only because it is unclear? Most things seem boring when we don’t understand them. Sometimes the problem is one of scale. If the information is necessary (yet “boring”), you may need to set a fuller con- text, to zero in on the critical part, or to take it in smaller, more digestible chunks. Do your examples demonstrate what you say they do? Bad examples sometimes survive from before you had total com- mand of the subject, or because you found them charming. Refining Your Draft 117 How’s the shape? As a whole, does the piece flow? Is it be- ginning to seem inevitable, as if the segments could never have been in any other order? Only with all big pieces in place should you go ahead to polish your writing, a process not unlike that of a plastic surgeon treating an aging movie star: you work all over. Pat pat pat, tuck tuck tuck, here there and everywhere—it’s important to keep everything in synch. If you perfect the face (metaphorically, the opener) before starting the neck and belly, the contrast will make the untreated parts look worse than they are. It will throw your judgment off. Worse, it will prevent you from seeing systemic fixes, in which you solve editorial problems by preventing them— nipping them in the bud, often a page or more before the problem shows up. This type of preemptive repair is smooth beyond belief.You may not even touch the passage where confusion first arose; the problem will seem to evaporate. That thought is so important I’ll not only repeat it, I’ll put it in boldface: Many editorial problems are best solved by preventing them—dropping back to an earlier passage to adjust for what’s to come. This approach helps all writing but is espe- cially important in writing science. More of our readers may be struggling to follow. They need all the help we can give. Your eventual goal is a piece of writing in which all parts support all other parts—like a tensegrity, one of those geo- metrical shapes of stick and string in which no stick touches another.Yet the structure is stable, held by the tension among all its interrelating parts.When your article reaches that con- dition, readers will find it easy to get engrossed. Every word will contribute, and no momentary doubt or question will intrude. Readers will be drawn irresistibly forward. Let’s look now at some of the less obvious reactions from page 113 to see how they might help you fine-tune your work. In the process, a few general “rules” will emerge. When they work, use them.When they do not, do some- thing intelligent. Huh? I thought he One common cause of confusion was dating the is that the reader has approached Marilyn Monroe! the passage with a misconception, Ideas into Words 118 any misconception, that was somehow fostered earlier in the piece. It’s bad when the reader gets nonplussed and has to work it out, as in this example of stupendous in- eptitude. (Of course you would have identified the Marilyn more clearly.) Worse is when the reader gets non- plussed and quits reading. Such problems are extremely common, flagged by variants of But-I-thought. Even something as small as a badly chosen verb can derail readers down the road. So, whenever a reaction boils down to But-I-thought, drop back to find and rectify the source. Huh? Inhaler bad Occasionally, But-I-thought arises for asthma? from misinformation or incomplete information, not in your article but in the public mind. For instance, many people do not know that when inhalers are overused, the re- lief they give may hide the fact that the patient is getting worse—much worse—and needs immediate medical attention.Whenever you get a chance to correct such an item, seize the opportunity.You may save a life. With more ordinary misconcep- tions, stay general. Find a good early place in which to say that these new findings invalidate old ideas. Sometimes it’s enough to call the research surprising. Only as a last resort should you actually debunk, because to repeat an error is to rein- force it. No w I get it! Frustrated comments like this one mark material (call it B) that should Refining Your Draft 119 . We’d better spell the connection out! A.Yes, and cut the other part. Or you might find you had felt a need to keep the human side of science more in sight all you needed was the bit. Would the passage work better if heavily pruned? Or fleshed out? Or in some other part of the article? Is the passage boring

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